The first two photos were taken on cycle paths, the middle two on a junction between a bicycle road (where cyclists have priority) and a cycle path, and the last two photos were taken on roads. I should perhaps point out that due to the amount of salt that has been put on the road, the slush that the cyclists are riding through corrodes everything on a bike quickly. A quality Dutch bike for everyday use has a fully enclosed chain and a very good paint job.

7 comments:

I didn't really like the snow today, it was wet snow, and getting it in your eyes or on your face really stings! I broke my umbrella the other day, so I couldn't use it. I normally don't mind snow or rain, as long as my umbrella does its job. :)

Great pictures. Generally, I've found riding on snow isn't a problem, provided you take it easy and don't do anything stoopid. In fact, it's pretty much the same as driving, except in a car you don't arrive at your destination all rosy-cheeked and grinning! Oh, and if you drove, you're invariably late, "because of the snow". :-P

Adrienne, there are more bikes than people in the Netherlands, so clearly a lot of people have more than one. However, generally the same town bike is used all year around.

These bikes are very robust. They have fully enclosed chains, hub brakes, hub gears (derailleurs are unreliable), mudguards (fenders) etc. and most importantly the good models have a paint job which is designed to last 20 years of outdoor use.

Earlier this year I made a video of a Dutch bicycle factory in which you can see the hot brine bath used to test components for corrosion resistance.

I've noticed the difference between the Dutch bikes that my elder daughter and my wife have - which have needed no maintenance at all - and the British bikes that I and my younger daughter have - which have needed lots of maintenance.

There is an (already written, but queued up) blog post that will appear in a few days showing the important parts of Dutch bicycles.

Also, I'd like to point out that very few people ever wash their bikes. I have to admit that the very idea seems ridiculous to me. Also, there would be little reason to wash a bike; what would make it dirty? There are clean (swept, gritted etc) bikepaths, there are no cars to splash me, and there are mudguards and skirtguards and the like to keep anything on the road hitting me, or the rest of the bike.

I have only one time cleaned my bike and that was the time I painted it to make the paint stick.

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